Experimental Microvascular Polytetrafluoroethylene Grafts

Abstract
The efficacy of 1-mm internal-diameter polytetrafluoroethylene as a microvascular prosthesis is unclear. In this study, 8-mm-long segments of this material were implanted into the femoral arteries of 30 rats. Animals were examined every 2 weeks up to 6 months by Doppler ultrasound. Cumulative patency by the life-table method was 86.7 percent at 6 months. There were 26 patent grafts, 2 occlusions, and 2 deaths. Intimal hyperplasia adjacent to the anastomoses was seen in the native arteries. The pseudointima lining the grafts was cellular near the anastomoses but usually acellular in midgraft regions. It is concluded that if early failure does not occur, then good long-term patency is possible with 1-mm polytetrafluoroethylene in this setting and that patency is not dependent on development of a cellular pseudointima. Longer graft segments should be evaluated in future studies.

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